JohnMiller3
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2001
- Messages
- 2,517
- Location
- Capital District, Upstate New York
- Tractor
- Satoh S650G, MF135, MF165, JD5205
Corriher BoxBlade looses tooth!-Built-in Safety
<font color="blue">( They are designed to bend or break and not damage the mount. Scarifier shanks are not designed to dislodge large rocks. If you would have been plowing and hit rock like this, the plow would trip the safety release. ) </font>
I agree…
Hi Guys,
Just as grade’s 2 & 5 “shear bolts” shears on different PTO driven equipment as a Safety Device… so be it with these scarifier teeth/pins…
Notice the mfr. horsepower range design ratings on the implements… ex. buying a 40-75 hp boxblade and using it with a BX2200… (hypothetical if! /forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif) Don’t blame the implement mfr. if the tractor’s 3-pt hitch breaks/bends or something shatters on the tractor… because the implement was designed being “heavy/medium duty”…
Perhaps, “operator error” was not the proper wording, but I find it hard to believe anyone was trying to be mean as much as they may have been trying to be helpful… /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif
Believe it or not Guys… these mfrs. don’t want you tearing up your tractor or the implement… sometimes paying more for heavy duty will get you more than you inadvertently bargained for… /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif
<font color="blue">( They are designed to bend or break and not damage the mount. Scarifier shanks are not designed to dislodge large rocks. If you would have been plowing and hit rock like this, the plow would trip the safety release. ) </font>
I agree…
Hi Guys,
Just as grade’s 2 & 5 “shear bolts” shears on different PTO driven equipment as a Safety Device… so be it with these scarifier teeth/pins…
Notice the mfr. horsepower range design ratings on the implements… ex. buying a 40-75 hp boxblade and using it with a BX2200… (hypothetical if! /forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif) Don’t blame the implement mfr. if the tractor’s 3-pt hitch breaks/bends or something shatters on the tractor… because the implement was designed being “heavy/medium duty”…
Perhaps, “operator error” was not the proper wording, but I find it hard to believe anyone was trying to be mean as much as they may have been trying to be helpful… /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif
Believe it or not Guys… these mfrs. don’t want you tearing up your tractor or the implement… sometimes paying more for heavy duty will get you more than you inadvertently bargained for… /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif